Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za Compiled by the Assessment Technology and Education Research Programme of the Human Sciences Research Council. This publication has been produced with the assistance of the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation and the Conference, Workshop and Cultural Initiative Fund of the European Union. The content of this publication is the sole responsibility of the HSRC and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the European Union. Published by HSRC Publishers Private Bag X9182, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa www.hsrcpublishers.ac.za First published 2004 © 2004 Human Sciences Research Council All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. ISBN 0 7969 2070 2 Cover design by Jenny Young Beaded dolls crafted by township residents from the Monkeybiz bead project, Tel +27+21-462-0145, email: monkeybiz@iafrica.com, www.monkeybiz.co.za Production by comPress DTP by User Friendly Distributed in Africa by Blue Weaver Marketing and Distribution, PO Box 30370, Tokai, Cape Town, 7966, South Africa. Tel: +27+21-701-4477 Fax: +27+21-701-7302 email: booksales@hsrc.ac.za Distributed worldwide, except Africa, by Independent Publishers Group, 814 North Franklin Street, Chicago, IL 60610, USA. www.ipgbook.com To order, call toll-free: 1-800-888-4741 All other inquiries, Tel: +1+312-337-0747 Fax: +1+312-337-5985 email: Frontdesk@ipgbook.com Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za Contents I ntroduction Through the eye of the school – in pursuit of social integration Mokubung Nkomo, Linda Chisholm and Carolyn McKinney 1 K eynote address Integration within the South African landscape: are we making progress in our schools? 11 Naledi Pandor P art 1 Overview, concepts, themes, patterns Paper 1 School inclusion and exclusion in South Africa: some theoretical and methodological considerations 19 Crain Soudien, Nazir Carrim and Yusuf Sayed Paper 2 Deracialisation of Gauteng schools – a quantitative analysis 43 Mohammad Sujee Paper 3 Educating South African teachers for the challenge of school integration: towards a teaching and research agenda 61 Relebohile Moletsane, Crispin Hemson and Anabanithi Muthukrishna Paper 4 A review of national strategies and forums engaging with racism and human rights in education 79 Shameme Manjoo P art 2 Interrnational perspectives Paper 5 The American experience: desegregation, integration, resegregation 95 Gary Orfield Paper 6 Understanding ‘inclusion’in Indian schools 125 Sarada Balagopalan P art 3 Constitutional and language challenges Paper 7 Constitutional perspectives on integration in South African schools 149 Elmene Bray v Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za Paper 8 Education and multilingualism 163 Thobeka Mda Paper 9 Inclusion versus integration: the tension between school integration and the language policy 183 Brigid Comrie P art 4 Reflections Reflections and closing commentary on the School Integration Colloquium 195 Prudence Carter A ppendix List of participants 201 vi Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za INTRODUCTION Through the eye of the school – in pursuit of social integration Mokubung Nkomo, Linda Chisholm and Carolyn McKinney To appreciate the value of school integration one has to understand South Africa’s history. The colonial and apartheid experiences have had a tremen- dous impact on the collective and individual psyches of South Africans – black and white, and all other identities. To varying degrees collective and individ- ual behaviours reflect this deep-rooted experience. It is this experience that prompted former President Nelson Mandela to observe in his inaugural speech in 1994 that, ‘Out of the experience of an extraordinary human disaster that lasted too long, must be born a society of which all humanity will be proud.’He continued,‘Never, never and never again shall it be that this beautiful land will again experience the oppression of one by another and suffer the indignity of being the skunk of the world.’ 1 The legacies of racial domination and other related forms of discriminatory practices linger on in a democratic South Africa and they manifest themselves in many ways systemically as well as at the individual level. There is a critical need for all social institutions under the guidance of the democratic Constitution to engage in the project of giving birth to a new society imbued with the values and principles of an enlightened, modern and democratic constitution. Schools, by virtue of their crucial role in society, can play an important role in this reconstructive project. What, therefore, does school integration mean? Given the historical circumstances described above, it must mean, among other things, that the divisions created by apartheid need to be addressed sys- tematically as well as systemically. Integration is not merely about changing the racially exclusive demographics of learner and educator bodies – what we might refer to as desegregation – although it is this too. By integration we mean schools changing to meet the needs of all children enrolled, fostering 1 Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za meaningful interaction among learners in the classroom, on the playground and in extramural activities, as well as instilling a human rights culture. In the context of South Africa school integration is also not confined solely to race, important as it is, but should seek to address other prejudices such as ethnic parochialism or chauvinism, gender inequality, xenophobia and other intoler- ances that are inimical to the spirit of the Constitution. It means seeking to construct curricula, texts and pedagogies that are informed by a democratic ethos. It requires teachers, school managers and communities that are equipped to promote a democratic school environment. In short, it is about inclusivity and social cohesion, in contrast to the division and fragmentation that characterised apartheid society and education. School integration in South Africa has deep roots in the anti-apartheid or, bet- ter still, the pro-democracy project; it is born out of a conscious effort to trans- form undemocratic apartheid culture and practice by replacing it with a democratic, inclusive, education ethos founded on a human rights culture. The pledge to ‘Never, never and never again [allow]… this beautiful land …[to] experience the oppression of one by another’, and the call for the birth of ‘a new society’ are authentically South African injunctions. Not only are concepts of non-racism, non-sexism and democracy entrenched in the Constitution, they are inextricably linked with such fundamental principles and values as access, equity and redress. There is, to be sure, much value in engaging with researchers from countries that are grappling with issues of school integration about their own experiences; an exchange that undoubtedly would enrich the South African experience. A concerted effort to promote research in school integration will thus give tangible effect to the national desire for a sustained democratic practice and human rights culture. The School Integration Colloquium Drawing from what we knew and a desire to define a meaningful research agenda for the future, a colloquium was convened in October 2003. Invited to the colloquium were South African and international researchers and other interested individuals who undertook to engage in proactive and constructive ways in various research streams that would enhance our understanding of the powerful operant dynamics in the school as well as help inform effective pol- icy formulation and practice. 2 REFLECTIONS ON SCHOOL INTEGRATION Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za The purpose of the colloquium was to review the latest international and local research and practice in the field of desegregation and integration of schools. We aimed to take stock of the status quo in school integration research and practice as well as to identify new directions research should be taking to sup- port the process of school integration. The colloquium brought together a broad range of participants – from universities, non-governmental organisa- tions (NGOs), provincial and national government – all of whom contributed to identifying gaps and silences, issues currently neglected or in need of fur- ther investigation, in school integration research and practice. At the start of the proceedings on 2 October 2003, Jonathan Jansen posed the question: ‘Why are we talking about school integration? Is it that this is just an American agenda?’ This took us back to the origins of this project and the rea- son it was initiated. The main purposes of the project, of which this collo- quium was a part, were distinctly local, although there were transatlantic connections. The conference aims were to investigate: • The unfolding role, character and dynamic of integration in South African schools – its connections to deeper historical, international and new con- temporary social patterns, practices, images and representations on an international and local scale; • The ways in which teachers, texts, managers and policy makers consciously and creatively make sense of and actively address the challenges posed by integration; • ‘Best practices’ in terms of innovation and alternatives to dominant repro- ductive practices. Furthermore, the conference aimed to: • Establish a process which connects the research with practitioners and policy makers, and promotes dialogue; • Make findings easily accessible and facilitate wide dissemination of the research products. What was the rationale for this? The defining feature of South African schools and schooling is arguably the politics of race and racism. It is one of the central fault lines of South African society, intersecting in complex ways with class, gender and ethnicity. Race is 3 INTRODUCTION Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za historically inscribed into the functioning of everyday life through those institutions in which the majority of children spend the greater part of their lives: schools. Seen as one of the principal generators, justifiers and vehicles of racialised thoughts, actions and identities, the challenge has been and contin- ues to be whether and how the roles, rules, social character and functioning of schools can change to reverse the retrograde aspects of such formation and stimulate new and diverse identities and forms of acknowledgement and social practice. South Africa is not alone in this challenge. Internationally, the massive global shifts of populations over the last century has seen the penetration of appar- ently relatively homogeneous national populations by peoples from beyond those national boundaries and borders. This process has modified older, internal, national social antipathies, or reinforced them. Although not new, particular forms of racism have accompanied diasporic movements of the last two centuries and diasporic populations have been both victims and perpe- trators of racism. Colonialism and imperialism have given rise over time to constructions of inclusion and exclusion on the basis of race. Such construc- tions have often meshed with language, culture and religion. Slavery, and migrant and indentured labour, in the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries together constructed internal populations who were and in many cases con- tinued in the twentieth century to be dispossessed and socially marginal. New social forces in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries propelled peoples across borders to augment social classes and races in newly constituted ‘developed’ worlds. Globally, the concepts of North and South, developed and underdeveloped or developing, and rich and poor, shade into a patchwork of colour constructs both on a domestic and an international scale. The issue of race and racism is as pertinent internationally as it is in South Africa. This is evident in the centrality of questions of race, racism, citizenship and diversity to school systems internationally. But there are key differences and local particularities within this common global historical experience. The historical pattern and politics of South Africa’s racial formation has been part of, but has also shown marked differences from, those of other countries. In this regard, key differences between South African and American discourses are not only that the latter frames integration issues primarily within a desegregation and multicultural framework, whereas South Africans prefer to speak of inclusivity and integration; they are also linked to the dimension of 4 REFLECTIONS ON SCHOOL INTEGRATION Free d own l oa d f rom www. h srcpu bli s h ers.ac.za [...]... role? The stark answer to these questions is that children in our schools are not integrating The racial and gender composition of our schools has been changed in some ways However, this fact cannot be termed integration 13 REFLECTIONS ON SCHOOL INTEGRATION Data on racial integration in schools is unusually scarce The most recent data available for racial integration in schools is apparently for 1997 It... and how this connects to broader social developments is documented and analysed by only a handful of researchers Major themes have focused on the relationship between decentralisation and desegregation and conflict and contradiction in identity formation They have also, rightly, concentrated on the continuing reproduction and manifestation of race and racism despite integration In this context, the main... 5 REFLECTIONS ON SCHOOL INTEGRATION of previously white, Indian and coloured schools had opened also to the wider world and new and different ways of seeing race and racism, segregation and integration were emerging that began to confront traditional and received ways of seeing these in South Africa Free download from www.hsrcpublishers.ac.za Despite reconciliation at national level and integration. .. process of building this nation To return to school, and our subject Let us begin with the assertion that integration will begin when we take our learners out of their skins The assertion is provocative and premature, because it is made without a considered reflection on integration • • • Are our schools making progress with integration? More importantly, what is meant by integration? Do we wish to establish... in one of the provinces where 7 REFLECTIONS ON SCHOOL INTEGRATION integration was high on the agenda Sujee’s case study of the deracialisation of Gauteng schools examined the racial composition of learner enrolment, the educator body and school governing bodies in previously African, Indian, coloured and white schools in the period 1996–2001 and in so doing showed that there are small pockets of integration. .. urgent attention Before venturing an attempt at answering the question on progress with integration, it is useful to reflect on some the voices that speak on these matters in South Africa today 11 REFLECTIONS ON SCHOOL INTEGRATION On 26 September 2003, the Sunday Times published articles by four men – apparently representative of our four racial groups – who had been asked to answer the question: ‘How far... INTRODUCTION The production of a new curriculum, which places citizenship and rights at its centre, as well as a National Action Plan to Combat Racism, raises a series of new questions about integration policies and practices in schools: on what kind of terrain in schools and teacher education institutions does the revised curriculum as well as the National Action Plan build; what are the national patterns... model of integration in South Africa is assimilation They approach the concept of integration largely within the framework of the concept of inclusion Their approach here is that integration must be approached by reference to difference, that differences are always interlocked and entangled, and that present within every inclusion are exclusions Within this conceptual approach, their main conclusions were... forms of discrimination and the South African Schools Act of 1996 provided the basis for the transformation of schools into paragons of non-racialism Provisions were made for the integration of schools, the rewriting of curricula and textbooks, the renovation of institutions dedicated to the training and education of teachers and renewal of support structures in the management of education In the meantime,... to foster inclusion? 21 REFLECTIONS ON SCHOOL INTEGRATION Theoretical overview Free download from www.hsrcpublishers.ac.za A discussion of the concept of social exclusion is underway in numerous contexts to assess its value in expanding understandings of injustice and inequality Kabeer (2000) and de Haan (2000), for example, pointedly ask whether the concepts of inclusion and exclusion, with their origins . Education and multilingualism 163 Thobeka Mda Paper 9 Inclusion versus integration: the tension between school integration and the language policy 183 Brigid Comrie P art 4 Reflections Reflections. and conflict and contradiction in identity formation. They have also, rightly, con- centrated on the continuing reproduction and manifestation of race and racism despite integration. In this context,. every inclusion are exclusions. Within this conceptual approach, their main conclusions were that constructions of race and schooling dictated the mode of assimilation into schools. The consequence